The Facts of Life

April 14, 2025

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Nothings

As a wedding present for his sister Suzanne and his close friend Jean Crotti, who were married in Paris on April 14, 1919, Duchamp instructed the couple by letter to hang a geometry book by strings on the balcony of their apartment so that the wind could “go through the book, choose its own problems, turn and tear out the pages.”

This Unhappy Readymade, as he called it, might strike some newlyweds as an oddly cheerless wedding gift, but Suzanne and Jean carried out Duchamp’s instructions in good spirit; they took a photograph of the open book dangling in midair (the only existing record of the work, which did not survive its exposure to the elements), and Suzanne later painted a picture of it called Le Readymade malheureux de Marcel. As Duchamp later told Cabanne, “It amused me to bring the idea of happy and unhappy into readymades, and then the rain, the wind, the pages flying, it was an amusing idea.”

Duchamp told one interviewer in later years that he had liked disparaging “the seriousness of a book full of principles,” and suggested to another that, in its exposure to the weather, “the treatise seriously got the facts of life.”

Calvin Tomkins, Duchamp: A Biography

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Thought:

“Like beautiful bodies of the dead who had not grown old

and they shut them, with tears, in a brilliant mausoleum,

with roses at the head and jasmine at the feet –

this is what desires resemble that have passed

without fulfillment; without any of them having achieved

a night of sensual delight, or a morning of brightness.”

Constantine P. Cavafy

Christian Molenaar

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